Principal component analysis for authorship attribution

Authors

  • Amir Jamak International University of Sarajevo, Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Alen Savatić International University of Sarajevo, Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina
  • Mehmet Can International University of Sarajevo, Faculty of Engineering and Natural Sciences, Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina

Keywords:

principal components, authorship attribution, stylometry, text categorization, function words, classification task, stylistic features, syntactic characteristics

Abstract

  Background: To recognize the authors of the texts by the use of statistical tools, one first needs to decide about the features to be used as author characteristics, and then extract these features from texts. The features extracted from texts are mostly the counts of so called function words. Objectives: The data extracted are processed further to compress as a data with less number of features, such a way that the compressed data still has the power of effective discriminators. In this case feature space has less dimensionality then the text itself. Methods/Approach: In this paper, the data collected by counting words and characters in around a thousand paragraphs of each sample book, underwent a principal component analysis performed using neural networks. Once the analysis was complete, the first of the principal components is used to distinguish the books authored by a certain author. Results: The achieved results show that every author leaves a unique signature in written text that can be discovered by analyzing counts of short words per paragraph. Conclusions: In this article we have demonstrated that based on analyzing counts of short words per paragraph authorship could be traced using principal component analysis. Methodology could be used for other purposes, like fraud detection in auditing.

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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.

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Published

2012-12-31